Samantha
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic All genders suck in the forum Small Talk 1 year, 2 months ago
Do you think it’s true that overall, men are more interested in sex, and women are more interested in relationships? I know there are a lot of exceptions at the detailed level.
Even if that’s not true, it’s definitely the case that men bother women a lot more than the other way round.
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic Sunday School February 23rd 2025 in the forum
Sunday School 1 year, 2 months agoReg the Fronkey Farmer wrote:
Women’s bodies are moralized more than men’s, study finds.This finding is exactly consistent with patriarchy behaving as a moral domain whose overarching method is to dominate and control women and their sexuality. Women are subject to all kinds of rules that men are not. The more they try to assert self-…[Read more]
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic All genders suck in the forum Small Talk 1 year, 2 months ago
Which gender is the most unstable? That depends on who you ask. Men and women probably display their instability in different ways.
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic Mr. Gradgrind was wrong. in the forum
Knowledge 1 year, 2 months agoReg the Fronkey Farmer wrote:
Your initial belief (before evidence) + new evidence = updated belief.That sounds very reasonable.
Unseen wrote:
It is not single axioms that strike me as obvious, it is a system in which consequences and premises give one another mutual support.” — Wittgenstein, On Certainty, sec. 141-42That’s good too. If ther…[Read more]
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic Mr. Gradgrind was wrong. in the forum
Knowledge 1 year, 2 months agoI thought that Bayesian reasoning was about extrapolating “what is” to “what might be”, thereby limiting new ideas.
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic Mr. Gradgrind was wrong. in the forum
Knowledge 1 year, 2 months agoI think that’s brilliant Reg. I’m not sure about Bayesian thinking though – it seems to repackage “what’s possible” as “based on what’s already the case” – not allowing in new ideas.
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic Sunday School February 16th 2025 in the forum
Sunday School 1 year, 2 months agoStrega wrote:
Regarding wishing we could all see each other as equals, that’s not how humans evolved. We are an instinctive tribal species, and there’s always “the enemy” somewhere to fight. If you’ve got no-one to fight, you’ll lose your fighting people.You see it in football in Europe. Each team has a particular nemesis team. We love compet…
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic Sunday School February 2nd 2025 in the forum
Sunday School 1 year, 2 months agoReg the Fronkey Farmer wrote:
What a real-life ‘trolley problem’ reveals about morality.This is very interesting, and shows what I always said: there is usually no single right or wrong answer to a moral question, but a number of right or wrong answers, one for each value that comes into play. So, something can be right in *this* way but wron…[Read more]
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic Sunday School January 26th 2025 in the forum
Sunday School 1 year, 3 months ago@robert – why were those things done? For what reasons?
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic Sunday School January 19th 2025. in the forum
Sunday School 1 year, 3 months agojakelafort wrote:
In any event as long as it can be established that the onset of transexualism is biologically based we take out the free will BS and that diminishes societal condemnation of trans people.If people chose to be trans, rather than being born that way – so what? It’s a harmless thing in itself, and not like molesting children,…[Read more]
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic Sunday School January 19th 2025. in the forum
Sunday School 1 year, 3 months agoI don’t think someone needs a “female brain” to feel like they are female. Who knows where gender identity resides? The body is a complex system. Biological sex is one thing. Psychological and social gender identity can be separate from that.
Where’s the relationship between being trans, and being gay? Is there one? How would that even be defined?
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic The Mathematical Proof of God, The Holy Trinity in the forum Theism 1 year, 3 months ago
King Iyk wrote:
The concept of the Trinity has long confounded the minds of humanity, defying the bounds of conventional logic. Any equation that seeks to embody the essence of the Trinity must equally transcend the confines of rational constructs.Are you saying that God can’t be expressed as an equation? Whose side are you on?
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic The Mathematical Proof of God, The Holy Trinity in the forum Theism 1 year, 3 months ago
King Iyk wrote:
You may choose to dismiss the scriptural foundation of this proof, yet one fact remains indisputable: the equation was derived through a systematic and coherent progression of ideas.That still doesn’t make it true. Also, a book can’t prove itself. It may have some things in it that correspond with reality, but that doesn’t m…[Read more]
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic The Mathematical Proof of God, The Holy Trinity in the forum Theism 1 year, 3 months ago
Johan wrote:
Do you have any clue what that is about?We have no clue what this number play is all about. I think it’s seriously clutching at straws.
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic The Mathematical Proof of God, The Holy Trinity in the forum Theism 1 year, 3 months ago
King Iyk wrote:
The proof explains why that is: 9 is The Triune Number.Can you sum up in a paragraph, how you inject God into the number 9? Maths is just maths.
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic The Mathematical Proof of God, The Holy Trinity in the forum Theism 1 year, 3 months ago
It sounds like an arbitrary quirk of number theory.
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic Sunday School December 29th 2024 in the forum
Sunday School 1 year, 3 months agojakelafort wrote:
On a hunch Simon will regard this experiment as relevant to his ideas about morality as they relate to evolution. Either way it is interesting.https://www.jpost.com/science/science-around-the-world/article-834805
That is interesting. The little ants can solve a collective lifting/navigation problem better than humans. They a…[Read more]
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic Arcane or Irrelevant Topic? On Free Will, Determinism, and Quantum Physics in the forum
Artificial Intelligence 1 year, 3 months ago_Robert_ wrote:
I disagree. One can go from happiness to being distraught in a millisecond, without the state of things changing at all.Maybe you can call it a mood.
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic Arcane or Irrelevant Topic? On Free Will, Determinism, and Quantum Physics in the forum
Artificial Intelligence 1 year, 3 months ago_Robert_ wrote:
Yeah, and this is also why some say we need a god…watching, looking, keeping score.We’re all monitored and evaluated the entire time, by ourselves and everybody who knows us. There’s a big eye watching us all the time, and it’s called the human race.
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic The Mathematical Proof of God, The Holy Trinity in the forum Theism 1 year, 3 months ago
King Iyk wrote:
Review and Confirm Proof Here.I think it’s interesting, but I don’t see what it has to do with anything. Anybody can draw any shape onto any map of the landscape, and call it significant.
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